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Excess and Longing
Wall Street Journal ^ | May 20, 2005 | DONNA FREITAS

Posted on 05/21/2005 6:10:04 AM PDT by The Great Yazoo

It's graduation time. As faculty and administrators dust off their fancy caps and gowns, twentysomething student bodies -- literally -- are gearing up for what is typically a week-long pre-graduation riot known as Senior Week.

According to students at the Catholic liberal-arts college where I teach, Senior Week exists almost outside of time and responsibility. Students drink, drink and drink some more only to wake up and drink again. The rare long-term attached girl or guy considers giving up his sweetheart for a last chance with that hottie from freshman biology and then another with the one from sophomore English. The unattached majority gleefully transform the weekly ritual of Thursday-through-Saturday-night hooking-up into a seven-day binge. In other words, it's a free-for-all, especially with respect to sex, and it's coming soon to a campus near you.

And yet the glee is short-lived. Ask any of my students and they will tell you that sexual tension on campus is thick. (Just as Tom Wolfe suggests in "I Am Charlotte Simmons," his recent novel of campus angst.) They are searching for more than what they now get from their relations with the opposite sex but don't know how to find it. They take full advantage of the liberties offered by the sexual revolution, moving from one partner to another on a near nightly basis, yet wake up feeling ashamed, lonely and used. After consecutive nights of promiscuity, some even drag themselves away from the girl or guy in their bed to Sunday services, praying all the while that she or he will be gone after the benediction.

Ms. Freitas teaches religious studies at St. Michael's College in Colchester, Vt.

(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...


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The unattached majority gleefully transform the weekly ritual of Thursday-through-Saturday-night hooking-up into a seven-day binge. In other words, it's a free-for-all, especially with respect to sex, and it's coming soon to a campus near you.
1 posted on 05/21/2005 6:10:04 AM PDT by The Great Yazoo
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To: The Great Yazoo

"hooking-up"


I HATE that expression! One praying mantis atop another is all I can envision!


2 posted on 05/21/2005 6:22:08 AM PDT by Maria S
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To: The Great Yazoo
"They take full advantage of the liberties offered by the sexual revolution, moving from one partner to another on a near nightly basis, yet wake up feeling ashamed, lonely and used."

Or at least the girls do. I remember doing about the same thing back in my college days thirty years ago and I woke feeling hungover and pretty damn proud of myself for scoring yet again with yet another fine looking coed. A couple hits on my well worn bong took care of the hangover and then it was time for a repeat performance to start the day off on the right note.

Of course in the good old days we could ply the girls with Quaaludes (Methaqualone) so it was more akin to shooting fish in a barrel than big game hunter, but all is fair in love and war.
3 posted on 05/21/2005 6:32:46 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: The Great Yazoo

"After consecutive nights of promiscuity, some even drag themselves away from the girl or guy in their bed to Sunday services, praying all the while that she or he will be gone after the benediction."

To err is human, to forgive is divine.


4 posted on 05/21/2005 6:36:51 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Archidamus
Drugs and booze evidently contribute mightily to your grossly exaggerated recollection of collegiate performance.

Those that brag about it didn't do it.
5 posted on 05/21/2005 7:04:02 AM PDT by The Great Yazoo ("Happy is the boy who discovers the bent of his life-work during childhood." Sven Hedin)
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To: The Great Yazoo

"Those that brag about it didn't do it."

Keep telling yourself that if it makes you feel any better.


6 posted on 05/21/2005 7:27:36 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Archidamus

Your self delusions make no difference to me.


7 posted on 05/21/2005 7:36:37 AM PDT by The Great Yazoo ("Happy is the boy who discovers the bent of his life-work during childhood." Sven Hedin)
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To: The Great Yazoo

"Your self delusions make no difference to me."

Your posting two messages to me belies your assertion. Look, you posted this article, so obviously you have a hangup about college kids getting laid.

Just because you never got any when you were in college doesn't mean that the rest of us were such losers.


8 posted on 05/21/2005 7:40:45 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Archidamus

Again, I care nothing of your self-delusions!


9 posted on 05/21/2005 7:57:37 AM PDT by The Great Yazoo ("Happy is the boy who discovers the bent of his life-work during childhood." Sven Hedin)
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To: The Great Yazoo

Sexual claim transformed perception of Wilt

LOS ANGELES -- The claim was so shocking as to be unbelievable: Wilt Chamberlain said he had sex with 20,000 women. The revelation made him fodder for comedians and turned the NBA Hall of Famer into a reference for sexual braggadocio.


Chamberlain died Tuesday at 63. He had a history of heart problems, and a fire department spokesman said there were signs that Chamberlain might have had a heart attack.


In his 1991 biography "A View From Above," Chamberlain devoted an entire chapter to sex. He said that if he had to count his sexual encounters, he would be closing in on 20,000 women.


"Yes, that's correct, twenty thousand different ladies," he wrote. "At my age, that equals out to having sex with 1.2 women a day, every day since I was fifteen years old."


The reaction was swift and severe.


Chamberlain jokes abounded. But he also became a lightning rod for those disgusted by his promiscuity.


Arthur Ashe harshly criticized Chamberlain and Magic Johnson, the former Los Angeles Lakers star who announced that he had contracted the AIDS virus months after Chamberlain's revelation.


In his 1993 memoir, Ashe said he didn't believe Chamberlain's claim.


"I felt more pity than sorrow for Wilt as his macho accounting backfired on him in the form of a wave of public criticism," Ashe wrote in "Days of Grace."


The behavior of Chamberlain and Johnson produced "a certain amount of racial embarrassment," Ashe wrote.


"African Americans have spent decades denying that we are sexual primitives by nature, as racists have argued since the days of slavery," Ashe wrote. "These two college-trained black men of international fame and immense personal wealth do their best to reinforce the stereotype."


Johnson has said he believes he got the AIDS virus by having unprotected sex with a woman who was infected.


"Before I was married, I truly lived the bachelor's life," he said. "I'm no Wilt Chamberlain, but as I traveled around NBA cities, I was never at a loss for female companionship."


Chamberlain knew that many people didn't believe him.


"I'm not boasting," he wrote, "I don't see all this lovemaking as any kind of conquest; all I'm saying is that I like women, people are curious about my sex life, and to most people the number of women who have come and gone through my bedrooms (and various hotel rooms around the country) would boggle the mind."


Chamberlain wondered how many men would be married if they had his opportunities.


"I'm sure plenty who read the numbers will no doubt think my taste is not particularly high or that I am 'easy,' " he wrote. "I am a man of distinctive taste and most of the women I have encountered, the average Joe would have proposed marriage to on the first date."


Chamberlain was a lifelong bachelor and was never engaged. He also denied rumors that he was gay. He said that of the 20,000 women, none was married at the time.


"And I made a conscious effort to find out. Even as a single man, infidelity has no place in my life," he wrote.


Chamberlain said that he dated women of every nationality and color, which helped him become a self-described villain.


"Whites didn't like it, and people of color wanted me to be more attentive to my own kind so they could be `proud' of me," he wrote.


He said he never meant to be disrespectful, insensitive or brazen by dating white women.


"I was just doing what was natural -- chasing good-looking ladies, whoever they were and wherever they were available," he said.


10 posted on 05/21/2005 8:02:32 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Maria S

"One praying mantis atop another is all I can envision!"

Do they have lovebugs where you live?


11 posted on 05/21/2005 8:11:37 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: The Great Yazoo

The Real Casanova

The life of Giacomo Casanova the man with the reputation as the world’s greatest lover. In a relentless pursuit that took him across the length and breadth of 18th Century Europe, Casanova seduced countless women. Noble women, nuns and harlots all fell for his devastating charm.

In the past Casanova has been dismissed as a selfish womaniser for whom women were little more than conquests, but historians are now re-examining his life and loves and he is emerging in a fascinating light – as a sexual revolutionary centuries ahead of his time.

“…After years of fantasising about a man who really knew how to give a girl a GST (Good Seeing To), we learn that Casanova was a sentimentalist looking for love, and one who respected women’s brains as well as their bodies.” Jaci Stephen “Mail on Sunday”

Casanova’s enlightened views on women and the importance of pleasure are revealed in his own words…”I have always loved and done all that I could to be loved. I was born for the opposite sex. All of my life I was the victim of my senses. I have delighted in going astray. Cultivating pleasure was always the chief business of my life”.

Casanova’s partner - pleasure seeking might seem less radical now but he remains a pioneer and a sexual icon. His refusal to conform to conventional morality by his choice of short-term affairs over life-long relationships continues to challenge us today.

“….a fascinating life, in which the sex god even managed to escape from jail, where he was thrown after enjoying foursomes with a French ambassador and two nuns. (It was never like this in The Sound of Music)…..Jaci Stephen “Mail on Sunday”.

THE REAL CASANOVA

Giacomo Girolama Casanova was born in Venice on April 2, 1725, in a house on the Calle della Commedia, near the Teatro San Samuele. His parents were actors: Gaetano Giuseppe Casanova and Zanetta (nee Farussi) and were frequently absent and the sickly child was raised almost entirely by his maternal grandmother, Marzia Farussi..

Casanova’s father died when the boy was eight and at nine he was sent to board in Padua where he studied for four years and fell in love with Bettina, the sister of his teacher, Dr. Gozzi’. For four years he studied law at the University of Padua and was befriended by the Venetian nobleman Senator Alvie Malipiero and had many amorous adventures.

In 1742 at age 17 Casanova received his degree as a doctor of civil and canon law but was expelled from the Seminary and became secretary to Giacomo da Riva, “Governor of the Galleys”. Eventually he was asked to leave. In between his erotic adventures, Casanova needed to make a living and in this regard he was greatly aided by extraordinary luck.

Rushing to the aid of an elderly passer-by who was suffering a heart attack, Casanova helped save the life of Matteo Bragadin, one of the richest and most powerful men in Venice. Casanova convinced the superstitious old man that divine destiny had brought them together. The grateful Bragadin adopted Casanova – setting him up in his own apartments with a gondola and a generous allowance. The young man already had the sexual appetites of a playboy – now he had the income as well.

Casanova indulged himself in the wildly promiscuous culture of his day and his seductions were lavish and luxurious affairs. In his 3000 page memoirs which were not published in full until 1966 he claimed he made love as many as six times in a night, providing helpful hints on how to share in his sexual prowess.

Casanova’s philandering won him enemies who reported his liaison with two nuns and the French Ambassador and the Venetian Inquisition of “public outrages against the holy religion” found him guilty. He was sentenced to five years in the Leads, Venice’s notorious jail. No prisoner had ever escaped from this fortress but, after 15 months, the ingenious Casanova became the first to do so. In 1757, he risked his life to climb over the prison’s rooftops and escaped to Paris where he dined out on stories of his derring –do and sexual escapades.

THE REAL CASANOVA

It was in France that he also secured his fortune – stealing a fellow Italian’s idea of setting up a successful national lottery. Rich, admired and single, he was able to enjoy life in Europe to the full. It was a period of decadent excess when people believed that devotion to pleasure was more important than belief in God and few embodied this spirit of wanton excess more than the world’s most famous lover.

As a result he contracted numerous venereal diseases, most often gonorrheae – despite his pioneering use of a linen condom – eight inches long and tightened at the base with a pink ribbon. Far from retreating in embarrassment, Casanova regarded the ugly marks left by venereal infection as badges of honour, similar to the battle scars sported by soldiers.

Equally, while he believed that a woman’s most important feature was her face, he did not discriminate against ugly women in the bedroom. “The book may be more interesting than the title page suggests,” he wrote. This theory was tested when he arranged to meet a local beauty in a garden one night. It was pitch black as he enjoyed the romp to the full, only to discover in the morning that a haggard, old widow with rotting teeth and hideous skin had taken his intended’s place in secret. He had given her an unsurpassed thrill; she had given him gonorrheae.

One young woman Casanova wooed turned out to be one of his illegitimate daughters. Even so, Casanova slept with her and she bore him a child who was both his son and his grandson. Casanova eventually fell out with the Marquise d’Urfe, the eccentric elderly French woman he had stung for years and in 1763 he fled to London.

It was in London that he met the one woman he could not charm. She was La Charpillon, a beautiful 17-year-old prostitute who took delight in tormenting Casanova. He gave her money and gifts and she almost drove him to suicide. For the next 20 years he continued to tour Europe seeking the success and respect he craved. He embarked on a series of literary projects and dabbled in politics. He did some spying for the Venetian Inquisition, reporting on the private conduct of his fellow citizens.

Tired and dejected, Casanova spent his last years in a castle in Bohemia – employed as a librarian by a wealthy count – where his only source of pleasure was to relive his extraordinary life and loves through writing his memoirs. These revealed that many of the women he loved thought fondly of the man who had ravaged them. They wrote Casanova tender letters and returned to his bed often, regardless of the risks to their reputation, of pregnancy or of venereal disease.

This suggests that there was more to Casanova than an unfeeling Lothario. Perhaps he was the world’s first New Man: intelligent, sensitive, athletic and never more content than when pleasing women. Those who had shared his bed never challenged his reputation as the world’s greatest lover.

In 1798, Casanova fell ill with an infection of the urinary tract. On his deathbed he gave his manuscript of the “Histoire de ma vie” to his nephew-in-law, Carlo Angiolini. He died at Dux on June 4, 1798. According to the Prince de Ligne, his last words were: “I have lived as a philosopher, and die as a Christian.”

http://www.abc.net.au/tv/documentaries/stories/s869601.htm

Live and learn.


12 posted on 05/21/2005 9:15:37 AM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Archidamus
All I know is I went to college at about the same time you did. I had a wide circle of acquaintances, so I knew who was doing what.

About 20 percent got about 80 percent of the action, while about 80 percent of the talk came from the 20 percent who were mostly engaging in, shall we say, "self-gratification." The "successful" 20 percent mostly kept it to themselves.

In my business in the financial services industry, I see the same thing as true about wealth today. Eighty percent of the wealth is held by 20 percent of the people. Eighty percent of the bragging about wealth (either outright bragging or through display of ostentation) comes from the 20 percent that lacks two nickles to rub together.

If you want to be Wilt the Stilt or Casanova in your mind, you're welcome to it. Just don't ask me to believe it! I'll believe you are Wilt's equivalent as soon as you convince me that you, too, scored 100 points in a single National Basketball Association game.
13 posted on 05/21/2005 11:16:01 AM PDT by The Great Yazoo ("Happy is the boy who discovers the bent of his life-work during childhood." Sven Hedin)
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To: The Great Yazoo
"If you want to be Wilt the Stilt or Casanova"

No, I do not want to be Wilt or Casanova, but I proved that you are full of crap with your assertion that no one who gets lots of nookie ever mentions it.
14 posted on 05/21/2005 1:45:26 PM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: The Great Yazoo
and it's coming soon to a campus near you.

Hmm, wonder if they'll take me back as a grad student. Will I have to grow a ponytail?

15 posted on 05/21/2005 1:49:21 PM PDT by Larry Lucido
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To: Archidamus

"Of course in the good old days we could ply the girls with Quaaludes (Methaqualone) so it was more akin to shooting fish in a barrel than big game hunter, but all is fair in love and war..."

...And criminal sexual assault. Welcome to FR, Newbie.


16 posted on 05/21/2005 1:58:09 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
I believe one is innocent until found guilty in a court of law are they not?

One did not have to slip something into an unsuspecting gals drink. The girls were clamoring for Ludes.
17 posted on 05/21/2005 2:04:12 PM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Diana in Wisconsin
"Students drink, drink and drink some more only to wake up and drink again."

And this is different from girls back in my day doing ludes, exactly how, old-timer?
18 posted on 05/21/2005 2:06:05 PM PDT by Archidamus (We are wise because we are not so highly educated as to look down on our laws and customs)
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To: Archidamus

Keep digging. ;)


19 posted on 05/21/2005 2:09:18 PM PDT by Diana in Wisconsin (Save The Earth. It's The Only Planet With Chocolate.)
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To: Archidamus
The girls were clamoring for Ludes.

Probably the only way they could stand being near you.

20 posted on 05/21/2005 2:09:56 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (No, as a matter of fact, I don't have a heart.)
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